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| Alphabetical [« »] chemists 1 chief 9 chiefly 2 child 12 child-murder 1 childhood 3 childishness 1 | Frequency [« »] 12 beam 12 chapter 12 character 12 child 12 common 12 death 12 difficulties | Thomas H. Marshall James Watt IntraText - Concordances child |
Art.
1 1| considered to be enough for any child, and, in the metaphors of 2 2| severe. This poor, weakly child, fresh from his mother's 3 2| at home." " Look how my child is occupied before you condemn 4 2| neglected: he is no common child." Of the two biographers 5 2| that Watt was an ingenious child with a natural taste for 6 2| discovery by the genius of a child still in the nursery. Steam-engines 7 2| under his coat the head of a child that had died of some unusual 8 4| and he has,through life, a child's passion for toys. Consequently, 9 5| creation, and he loved it as a child. He could not bear to see 10 6| Queen showed me her last child, which is a beauty." A few 11 6| over a delicate, nervous child. Boulton was like a comfortable 12 9| about his problems, to the child about its toys, and fascinate